Baylor University plans to release information on every sexual assault reported to the school since 2003 "to the extent the records are available and still exist," according to a brief filed Friday by the university's attorneys.

A judge has yet to rule on the school's proposal.

The information released by Baylor will include:

the date of the alleged assault

the date the alleged assault was reported to a Baylor employee

the location of the alleged assault

whether the victim was a Baylor student

the genders of the victim and the alleged assailant

whether Baylor knew the identities of the victim and alleged assailant

the offices or type of Baylor employees who were made aware of the alleged assault

the disposition of the complaint

The information will be listed in a spreadsheet and will cover the period from Jan. 1, 2003 to February 2016, the month of the last alleged assault in the case. It will seek to provide "a comprehensive overview of available information while protecting student privacy," according to the brief.

Baylor asked for 30 days to prepare the cases from 2011 to 2016 and an additional 30 days for the cases from 2003 to 2010.

According to the brief, the court requested additional briefing at a June 16 hearing, and the plaintiffs' lawyers suggested they needed data showing trends over time.

"Baylor has made a proposal to the court regarding contested issues in pending litigation," the school said in a statement. "The court has not yet ruled on this proposal. This information has yet to be compiled and is separate from the investigation conducted by Pepper Hamilton."

There have been seven Title IX suits filed against Baylor University, the most recent involving an alleged 2012 gang-rape of a volleyball player by members of the football team.